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Apostrophes and Possessive S

There are two main ways to show ownership in writing: using a possessive apostrophe or using a possessive pronoun. This section will define and provide examples of each.

Possessive Apostrophes

Apostrophes are signals telling the reader that a word is either possessive or a contraction. As a communicator, it’s important to understand the difference between the two. Apostrophes are used to form contractions to indicate omitted letters, such as couldn’t (the apostrophe indicates the missing letter o ). Apostrophes are also used to signal omitted numbers, such as The 80s (the apostrophe indicates the missing numbers 19). But this has nothing to do with apostrophes used to show possession.

To use an apostrophe to show ownership, you simply add apostrophe s or s apostrophe to a noun, depending on whether it’s singular or plural.

Singular

EXAMPLES:

  • The car’s new tires were next to John’s workstation. (there is only one car and one John, so we simply add an apostrophe s to indicate singular ownership).
  • The woman’s home needed refurnishing, so she used last week’s pay to go furniture shopping.

 

Plural Possessive Apostrophe

To indicate plural ownership, add the s apostrophe.

EXAMPLES:

  • The carsnew tires were stacked up next to the mechanics workstations (in this case there is more than one car and more than one mechanic, so we would use s apostrophe).
  • The roommates house needed repairs, so they all agreed to use some of the extra months rent money they’d saved to go furniture shopping.

 

Possessive Apostrophe

Singular Ownership: to indicate singular ownership, add apostrophe s:

Joint and Individual Ownership: to show joint ownership, only the last noun/name has the apostrophe s. To show individual ownership, each noun/name has an apostrophe s.

EXAMPLES:

  • Joint: Mary, Beth, Phil, and Bill’s house.
  • Individual: Mary’s, Beth’s, Phil’s, and Bill’s houses.

 

Nouns Ending is S

When making a possessive of a singular noun that already ends in s, writers can make the possessive by adding ’s to the word; however, some writers and editors argue that there’s no need to include an s after the apostrophe, since the apostrophe already tells readers that the word is possessive. Others argue that you should drop the final s only on words of several syllables but retain it on short words. Since there is no agreement on this, must make your own choice. Regardless of which option you choose, be consistent.

EXAMPLES:

Table 29.1 shows three proper nouns that end in s, each of which is correct:

TABLE 29.1: Proper Nouns Ending in S
NAME APOSTROPHE S S APOSTROPHE
James James’s James
Jones Jones’s Jones
Jesus Jesus’s Jesus

*NOTE: There are irregular nouns like fish (one fish, two fish) and goose (one goose, two geese), but we won’t worry about those right now.

Possessive Pronouns

Pronouns, such as him, her, they, and them are stand-ins for proper nouns; in other words, they refer to someone or something specific without using the proper noun or name. Possessive pronouns show ownership. Some are used alone, while others are used to modify or describe a noun.

Used alone: mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, whose 

EXAMPLE: That computer is hers. That car is mine.

Used as modifier: my, your, his, her, its, ours, their, whose

EXAMPLE: That is her computer. The car needs its clutch replaced.

*Note that none of the possessive pronouns uses an apostrophe to show ownership. Pay extra attention to your use of possessive pronouns, as several of them sound like some commonly used contractions. For example, watch your use of the following commonly confused possessive pronouns and contractions: Your/You’re, Its/It’s, Their/They’re, and Whose/Who’s.

 

Attribution

This chapter is an adaptation of Grammar Lesson-Apostrophes/Possessive S by Will Fleming and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted. You can download this book free at Technical Writing for Technicians Copyright © 2019.

License

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Effective Business Communication Copyright © 2024 by Loyalist College is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.